Hydraulic-operated lockbolt fastener setting tool

ABSTRACT

A hydro-pneumatic hand tool that is trigger-controlled to fasten a collar over the end of a headed lockbolt provided with locking grooves and a severable pintail, and then to create a predetermined clamping and swaging force on said lockbolt and collar by the use of a two-piston system, with each piston having an independent power source.

Umted States Patent [191 1111 3,777,540 Siebol et al. Dec. 11, 1973 [54] HYDRAULIC-OPERATED LOCKBOLT 3,091,982 6/1963 Siebol 29/509 FASTENER IN OO 3,559,270 2/1971 Beghi 29/520 lnventofsi George Siebol; Dorian PPY, FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 322$; 5; 22 550,230 12/1942 Great Britain 72/391 [22] Filed: July 262 1972 Primary Examiner-Richard J. Herbst [21] Appl. No.: 275,199 Assistant Examiner-Gene P. Crosby Attorney-Hyman Jackman Related US. Application Data [62] Division of Ser. No. 876,647, Nov. 14, 1969, Pat. No.

3,680,202. [57] ABSTRACT A hydro-pneumatic hand tool that is trigger-controlled 52 .8. Cl. a Cl 33; to fasten a collar over the end of a headed lockbolt Field 29/520 provided with locking grooves and a severable pintail, ,3 and then to create a predetermined clamping and swaging force on said lockbolt and collar by the use of [56] References Cited a two-piston system, with each piston having an inde- UNITED STATES PATENTS Pendent 3,082,898 3/1963 Bosch 72/391 11 Claims, 10 Drawing Figures r illlllll HYDRAULIC-OPERATED LOCKBOLT FASTENER SETTING TOOL This is a division of application Ser. No. 876,647 filed Nov. 14, 1969, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,680,202.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention Fastening together plates or other members in flatwise engagement. The present invention deals with improvements of the U.S. patents to Siebol, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,091,982 and 3,241,421.

2. Prior Art The applicants have no knowledge of any comparable tools for similar or related purposes that utilize reacting forces supplied by the tool itself to effect a predetermined clamp-up load immediately prior to and during swaging of a collar to a lockbolt. A known competitive tool utilizes the reactive force of the severable pintail breakneck load to swage the locking collar onto the lockbolt. However, when the reactive force of the severable pintail breakneck lead is used to swage certain metals requiring an inordinately high swaging force, too high a tensile load is placed on the lockbolt locking grooves and this may cause failure of the question.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION A hydro-pneumatic gun having a large piston for the swaging of a malleable collar into annular grooves of a headed lockbolt and a small piston to provide a predetermined preload and sever the pintail when drawn to a pre-set stop, the pistons having independent power sources. The large pistons hydraulic source is a pneumatic hydraulic intensifier. The source of power for the small piston is pneumatic pressure which is exerted on an hydraulic oil reservoir. Both power sources are controlled by pneumatic hand-operated means.

The hydro-pneumatic gun here disclosed, which utilizes an independent lockbolt collar swaging force with an hydraulic piston, and supplies a clamping force to the severable pintail with an independent smaller piston, may be utilized to meet the required higher lockbolt collar swaging forces of various materials and predetermine the clamping force to the severable pintail. This clamping force may be pre-set to any desired load. This tools range may include plastics as well.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS In the drawings, like reference characters designate similar parts in the several views.

FIG. 1 is a broken vertical sectional view of a lockbolt setting tool according to the present invention, shown in the position of the parts thereof during the first operation step.

FIGS. 2, 3, 4 and 5 are fragmentary sectional views showing the successive positions of the tool parts that set on the lockbolt during the second through the final operation steps.

FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view, to a reduced scale, as taken on the line 6-6 of FIG. 1.

FIG. 7 is a semi-schematic view of the tool showing the hydro-pneumatic operative components in diagramatic arrangement in the off or at rest position thereof.

FIGS. 8 and 9 are similar semi-schematic views, with the gun portion of the tool omitted, respectively showing the power stroke positions of the components and the positions of the components at hydraulic intake.

FIG. 10 is a side elevational view of a lockbolt as used in the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT The procedure for installation of the fastener is as follows. The fastener 10 is placed through a hole in the sheets 15 to be fastened. The locking collar 13 is placed within the swaging tool 28. The swaging tool is then placed over the severable pintail l2 and onto the locking grooves thereof. When the trigger of said tool is actuated, the large piston 40 thereof places the collar 13 into position and closes the gripping jaws 46 over the severable pintail. By the forward movement of the large piston, the tool is forced away from the sheet. The movement away from the sheet automatically applies a predetermined clamping force based upon the force applied against the small piston 36. As the swaging tool is completing the final swaging of the locking collar 13 into the locking grooves, the small piston 36 is pulled to a pre-set stop, thereby severing the pintail and leaving the fastener permanently set with a predetermined residual clamping load within the joint that has been fastened.

The present tool is devised to install a lockbolt fastener in sheetor plate-connecting engagement. Said fastener comprises a lockbolt 10 (FIG. 10) having a head 11 on one end, a shank-gripping portion 10a, annular locking grooves 10b in said end, a pre-set weakened breakneck 10c, and a grippable, severable pintail 12 of reduced size extending from the breakneck 10c, and a malleable collar 13 having an outer circumferential enlargement l4. Said fastener is shown in the successive steps of its installation connecting plates 15 of FIGS. 1 to 5, inclusive, wherein the lockbolt 10 is entered from one side of said plates into aligned holes in said plates so the head 11 thereof is on one side of the plates, and the locking grooves 10b, breakneck 10c and the pintail 12 thereof, extend through and beyond the opposite side, and the lockbolt collar 13 is slid over the pintail and onto the grooved portion of the shank as in FIG. 1.

The present tool comprises, generally, a gun portion 20 mounted on a hand grip 21 provided with an operation-instituting trigger 22, and a gun-controlling power component 23 depending from the hand grip, said component 23 being provided with a pressure air inlet 24.

The gun 20 is shown as comprising a body 25 having a forwardly directed portion 26 with an inner flange 27 on the end thereof, and a tubular swaging anvil 28 with an extension-limiting flange 29, engageable by said flange 27, having an opening 30 through which a collar is adapted to be inserted into the hollow of the anvil 28 preparatory to application of said collar to the grooved portion 10b of a lockbolt.

Said body 25, at its rearward end, is provided with a cylinder 31 having a vent 32 at one end, and a transverse partition 33 closing the other end of said cylinder, said partition having an axial bore 34 for the stem 35 of a small piston 36 fitted in said cylinder 31. The partition is provided with a rearward projection 37 constituting a pre-set stop to limit the forward position of the piston and of the gripping jaws 46 on said stem 35. A spring 380 between the small piston 36 and the partition 33 provides a light rearward bias on said piston.

A second cylinder 39 is provided in said gun body, forwardly of the partition 33, a second piston 40, larger than the piston 36, being fitted in said cylinder and having a hollow stem 41 through which the stem 35 extends forwardly. Said larger piston is biased rearwardly toward the partition 33 by a spring 42. A hollow, forward extension 43 on hte hollow stem' 41 serves to close the jaws 38 into gripping engagement with the pintail 12. Further forward movement postions the collar 13 into engagement with the plates 15 during the collar-swaging operation of the tool by the member 28.

A port 44 for hydraulic fluid extends radially through the gun body and opens into the cylinder 31 in the area thereof between the partition 33 and the piston 36, the pressure of said fluid biasing this piston rearwardly. Hereinafter, said piston 36, the stem 35, and the jaws 38 on the latter, will be called the back piston, since itsactive movement, when pulling on a pintail, is backward. A second port 45 for high-pressure hydraulic fluid extends radially through the gun body and opens into the area of the cylinder 39 between the partition 33 and the piston 40. The force of said fluid, under high pressure, biases the piston 40 forwardly. Hereinafter, said piston 40, its stem 41, and extension 43 on the latter, will be called the high-pressure piston, its active movement, when pressing against a collar 13, being forward. The member 43 is tenned the inner anvil.

It will be noted from FIG. that, at the end of a cycle of operation, the jaws 38 are normally biased apart, so release of the removed partion of the pintail is automatic upon such spreading of the jaws. Said jaws are closed over the pintail by the inner anvil 43 which positions the collar 13 against the plates being fastened and then forces the collar out of the swaging member 28, thereby removing the pintail after complete swaging of the collar.

It will be realized from a comparison of FIG. 1 on the one hand, and FIGS. 2 and 3 on the other, that because the high-pressure piston 40 has a stationary position when bearing against the collar 13, the resultant pressure on the partition 33 will cause the gun 20 to back away from the plates 15, so that the inreaching swaging flange 47 on the swaging anvil 28 will cause the annular enlargement 14 of the collar to become flattened and, in the process, force the metal of the collar into the grooves b, locking together the bolt 10 and the collar 13, as in FIGS. 3 and 4.

The hand grip 21 is secured to and extends downwardly from the gun body 25 and, in this case, is provided with a flange 50 at its lower end and with a preferably cylindrical extension 51. The above-mentioned port 44 in the gun body communicates with a generally vertical passage 52 in the grip 21, the same having a laterally directed outlet 53. The port 45 in said body communicates with a vertical passage 54 in the grip, the same terminating in a lateral outlet 55, as well as in a downward outlet 56 controlled by an upwardly opening check valve 57.

After the lockbolt pin 10 is inserted, as above indicated, from one side of the workpiece l5 and the collar 13 is placed into the swaging anvil 28, the gripping jaws 38 are in overlapped relation with the grippable pintail 12. It is then that the trigger is depressed to cause the inner anvil 43 to move forward and close said jaws 38 over the pintail 12 and to forwardly position the collar against the sheets being fastened, creating a pre-load between collar 13 and small piston 36. The continued forward movement of the anvil 43 forces the collar 13 out of the swaging tool 28 which swages the collar 13 onto the locking grooves 10b of the lockbolt pin 10, with the breakneck and pintail extending therefrom. Upon completing the collars swaging, the piston 36 is drawn to a pre-set stop, severing the pintail.

It will be clear that said collar 13 is retained in contact with the side of the plates 15 from which the pintail 12 extends by the large piston which forces the collar forwardly out of the swaging tool against said plates, thereby also forcing the entire tool away from the plates being fastened. This creates a reacted force against the small piston 36 to establish a predetermined clamping force. The collar 13 is swaged into a locked engagement with the grooved portion 10a that is adjacent to the plates 15, leaving the pintail 12 extending from the collar, as in FIGS. 2 and 3. Said pintail 12 is removed by the small piston 36 reaching a pre-set stop as in FIG. 4, completing the installation of the lockbolt with a pre-set residual clamping force remaining in tight joining engagement with the plates 15. The present tool carries out the above generally-described installation in four successive operational steps, initiated by a pull on the trigger of the gun. A fifth operational step releases the removed portion of the pintail, readying the tool for installation of another fastener.

The power component 23 of the tool, as controlled by the trigger 22, carries out the five operational steps and is housed in a body 60 that is secured to the flange 50 of the hand grip and, as shown, depends thereform. Said component 23 is shown in three operative positions: in FIG. 7, the position of rest; in FIG. 8, the power stroke position; and in FIG. 9, the hydraulic intake position.

On a common vertical axis, the power unit 23 comprises an hydraulic reservoir 61 through the center of which said extension 51 extends into a bore 60, a sliding piston 63 being fitted on said extension and operative in the reservoir 61; an hydraulic build-up chamber 64 below the lower end of the extension 51, a check valve 57 controlling hydraulic flow between said buildup chamber 64 and the passage 54; and an air intensifier comprising a high-power hydraulic piston 67 operative in the chamber 64 and a lower attached pneumatic piston 68 with a bottom surface 66 and a top surface 66a operative in a cylinder 65.

Said power component 23 further comprises an airflow-controlling trigger valve 70 operable by the trigger 22, to open pressure air to supply such air to the component 23 during the power stroke and hydraulic intake positions thereof; a mechanical timing valve 71; an air-pressure-reversing valve 72; an hydraulic check valve 73; an hydraulic drain valve 74; and an hydraulic safety valve 75. From FIG. 6, it will be noted that the valves 71, 73, 74 and 75 are arranged around the extension 51 in the body 60 and that the trigger valve 70 and the reversing valve 72 are provided in an offset portion 76 of the body 60, the latter below the former.

The trigger-controlled air valve 70 comprises a cylinder 77, and a flow-controlling spool 78 operable in said cylinder and having an air passage 79 and provided with a trigger-engageable upper end 80. The air inlet 24 is open to the lower end of the cylinder, which is provided with a vent port 81 and a vent-pressure port 82.

The mechanical timing valve 71 comprises a cylinder 83 and a flow-controlling spool 84 operable in said cylinder which is slidingly fitted with a headed stem 85 tional ball check; the hydraulic drain valve 74 is shown as having a cylinder 97 fitted with a spring-biased piston 98 with a reduced end controlling a ball check 99; and the hydraulic safety valve 75 is shown as a ball check 100 that is biased against pressure by a spring loadedfollower 101.

An air flow line 102 interconnects the vent-pressure port 82 of the trigger-controlled valve 70 with the res ervoir 61, with vent-pressure port 87a of valve 71, with the vent-pressure port 94a of valve 72, and with the cylinder 97 of the hydraulic drain valve 74, below the piston 98 thereof.

A flow line 103 connects the port 87b of valve 71 with the port 91, and a flow line 104a connects the ports 88 and 92 to said respective valves.

A flow line 104 connects the port 95 of valve 72 with the upper portion of the chamber 69, and a flow line 105 connects the port 96 of said valve with the lower portion of said chamber.

A flow line 106 connects the lower portion of the reservoir 61 with the inlet side of hydraulic check valve 73, with a port 107 to the ball check 99, and with a port 108 to the ball check 100. A flow line 109 connects the build-up chamber 64 with a port 110 to the check valve 73.

A line 111 connects the lower end of the passage 54 with the line 106 through the hydraulic drain valve 74 and the hydraulic safety valve 75.

For lack of space, the valve 70 has been omitted from FIG. 9. This valve, in the position thereof as in FIG. 8, should be considered as being connected to line 102. Also, it will be seen from FIG. 1 that the stem 85 is connected to and moves with surface 66a of the differential piston 68. This connection should be assumed for said stem in FIGS. 7, 8 and 9.

OPERATION: PRELIMINARY As explained above, the lockbolt pin is inserted into the mentioned aligned holes in the plates or workpiece in the position of FIG. 1, with the head 11 of said pin on one side and the locking grooves 10b, breakneck 10c, and the grippable pintail 12 on the other. The collar 13 is inserted into the opening 30 of the tubular portion of swaging member 28, the member 43 being withdrawn slightly more than in FIG. 5 and the jaws 38 similarly withdrawn. With the collar 13 retained in position by the swaging flange 47, the spread jaws 38 may be moved into position over the pintail 12. Depressing the trigger 22 causes the inner anvil 43 to move forwardly, closing the jaws 38 over the grooves of the pintail 12 and moving the collar 13 into swaging position against the workpiece, as in FIG. 1. This movement causes a reactive force to be applied by the piston 36 which, in turn, causes the pre-load between the sheets being fastened. By moving the collar to'this position, a preset pull is exerted on the pintail 12 which is maintained during the swaging operation by piston 36. The swaging operation is accomplished by the forward movement of the inner anvil 43 which forces the collar out of the swaging anvil 28 and into the locking grooves 10b. The pre-load is maintained by piston 36 moving forward against a set hydraulic pressure until it reaches stop 27 where forward travel is stopped. This, in turn, causes the pintail 12 to be parted from lockbolt 10. As the inner anvil continues forward movement relative to the end of the swaging anvil 28, the gun is bodily forced away from the workpiece 15, causing the swaging member 28 to be drawn in a backward direction over the collar 13. The resultant radial compression around the entire circumference of the enlargement 14 of said collar 13 forces the metal of the collar into locking engagement in the grooves of the shank. The lock is permanent, with a set pre-load, in tension, on the lockbolt pin 10.

OPERATION: Position of Rest of the Tool Referring particularly to FIG. 7, with reference as required to FIGS. 1 through 5, the solid arrows represent 'air pressure that is effective to raise the spool 78 of the air trigger valve to its raised position shutting off air flow to the other components of the tool. The dotted arrows represent venting or return. air flow for the various components of the tool, and the horizontal dotted lines in certain of the passages, in the hydraulic buildup chamber 64, and below the ball of the check valve 72, are representative of hydraulic fluid under no holding pressurel Following the broken arrows, it will be seen that the reservoir 61, above the piston 63, is directly vented through line 102, through the valve 70, to exhaust port 81 of said valve; that the chamber 69, above the piston 68, is vented through the pressure-reversing valve 72 through exhaust port 93, or to line 102, and thence to exhaust port 81, depending on the position of pressurereversing valve 72 when trigger valve 70 is released; that said chamber 69, below said piston 68, is vented through the line and the valve 72, through the vent port 94 of said valve, or to line 102, and thence to exhaust port 81, depending upon the: position of pressurereversing valve 72; that the upper end of valve 72 is vented through line 103 and the mechanical timing valve 71, through exhaust port 86, or to vent port 87a in the mechanical timing valve 71, to exhaust port 81 through line 102, depending upon the position of flowcontrolling spool 84; that the lower end of valve 72 is vented through line 104a and valve 71 to the exhaust port 81 through line 102, or through valve 71 to exhaust port 87, depending upon the position of spool 84; and that the cylinder 97, below the piston 98 of the hydraulic drain valve 74, exhausts through port 81 by way of line 102, allowing the spring bias on said piston to open the ball check 99.

OPERATION: Power STroke while simultaneously applying pressure to the top of the poppet 90 of the air-reversing valve 72 to move the same to the low position of FIG. 8, thereby causing application of air pressure in the lower portion of chamber 69 and upwardly on the air intensifier piston 68, and applying pressure in cylinder 97 of the hycraulic drain valve 74 to raise the piston 98 thereof, closing the check valve 99. To allow the poppet 90 to be depressed, the bottom of valve 72 exhausts through line 104a and exhaust port87 of the mechanical timing valve; and to allow the air intensifier piston 68 to move upwardly, as indicated, the upper portion of chamber 69 vents through line 104 and the exhaust port 93 of the pressure-reversing valve 72.

Since the exhaust port 81 is closed in the triggeractuated position of the valve 70, as in FIG. 8, the valve 72, below the poppet 90, is vented through exhaust port 87, as above described. The downward movement of the air piston part 68 affects a downward shift of the spool 84, by means of the head on stem 85, and air piston 68 acts on the bottom of the spool to return it to a raised position, as in FIG. 7 and 9.

The air pressure on the surface 66 of the piston 68 produces an increased hydraulic force in the build-up chamber 64, by piston 67. This hydraulic force is shown in double-headed dot-dash line arrows. The same is effective, through line 109, to hold the check valve 73 closed against any pressure thereon from the reservoir 61. This high pressure is effective in passage 54 and against the larger piston 40 in the gun 20 to cause the member 43 to press the collar 13. The buildup of pressure between the partition 33 and said piston 40 creates a reaction therebetween that causes the gun to be forced away from the workpiece 15, thereby creating a reactive force on back piston 36, pulling it forward simultaneously under a low hydraulic load, causing a predetermined clamping force to the position of FIG. 2, then of FIG. 3, whereby the swaging flange 47 of said member 43 forces the metal of the collar into the locking grooves b of the bolt 10 immediately adjacent to the pintail 12, and firmly locking the lockbolt collar to the lockbolt, and tightly securing the plates to each other.

As the hydraulic intensifier piston 68 moves to the top of its stroke, the head of stem 85 releases the spool 84 of the mechanical timing valve 71, allowing piston 68 to set against the lower end of said spool, returning the same to its raised position of FIG. 8. This shifts the timing valve 72 to re-time the ports thereof, thereby putting air pressure on the surface 66a of the intensifier piston 68 and starting the downward or return cycle. The downward movement of piston 67- unseats ball check 73 and draws hydraulic fluid into chamber 64 for use on the upward stroke. Each time the valve 71 shifts and re-shifts, the intensifier piston 68 reciprocates as necessary, or as long as the trigger is depressed, to complete the installation of the lockbolt fastener.

OPERATION: Return to Rest Position When the trigger is released and the spool 78 of the trigger valve 70 moves to its raised position, as in FIG. 7, by the pressure of air in the inlet 24, the ports of said valve become aligned to exhaust air in line 102 and, 6

voir air piston chamber 61, and air intensifier chamber 69.

Upon such release of air pressure, the spring 42 of the gun forces the large piston to its retracted position, thereby forcing the hydraulic fluid past the check valve 99, into line 106, and back into reservoir 61. Also, the spring 38a in front of the predetermined clamping force piston 36 forces the latter to its retracted position and draws hydraulic fluid into cylinder 31 from reservoir 61 through line 52; this in turn makes room for inserting a new collar 13 into the gun and a new cycle of operation is ready to be started.

While the foregoing has illustrated and described what is now contemplated to be the best mode of carrying out the invention, the construction is, of course, subject to modification without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.

Having thus described the invention, what is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:

1. An air-controlled hydraulic tool for setting a lockbolt fastener comprising a lockbolt and a swageable collar adapted for permanent clamping onto the lockbolt, a pintail on an end of the lockbolt severably removable after swaging of the collar on the lockbolt, said tool comprising:

a gun portion comprising means to grip a pintail on said lockbolt,

means to swage a locking collar onto the lockbolt forwardly of the pintail, and

two separate hydraulically movable piston means to successively operate the gripping and swaging means;

a trigger-provided hand grip extending downwardly from the gun portion and a passage for hydraulic fluid leading to each above-mentioned piston; and

a power component extending downwardly from the hand grip and comprising hydraulic means to supply hydraulic fluid under pressure through said passages to the mentioned pistons, and

pneumatic means to operate the hydraulic means and controlled by the trigger on the hand grip.

2. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 1 in which the means to grip the pintail comprises:

spring jaws biased to an open, non-gripping position,

a stem connecting one of said pistons with the gripping means, and

the other piston having a sleeve partly coextensive with said stem and provided with an end portion that closes said spring jaws upon relative endwise movement of said pistons.

3. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 2 in which the means to swage the locking collar comprises:

- a diametrally reduced endmost portion of the end of the sleeve, and

an anvil slidingly carried by the forward end of the gun portion and having an intumed annular flange around said reduced endmost portion of the sleeve for swaging engagement with an annular enlargement of the collar to lock the collar to the lockbolt.

4. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 3 in which:

the two separate pistons operate in differently sized cylinders in the gun portion,

the piston connected to the pintail-engaging jaws and its cylinder are smaller than the piston connected to the mentioned jaw-closing sleeve and the cylinder thereof, and the mentioned hydraulic passages are connected to the respective cylinders, the port to the larger cylinder conducting highpressure fluid to the rearward side of the piston therein to project the jaw-closing end of the gripping means, and

the port to the smaller cylinder conducting fluid at a lower pressure to the forward side of the smaller piston to propel the jaws, when closed over a pintail, rearwardly to sever same from the lock bolt. 5. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 3 in which:

the anvil comprises a tubular member on the forward end of which the mentioned annular flange is provided, and a hole is provided in the wall of said tubular member adjacent to said flange for freely passing a collar into the anvil between said flange and the forward end of the pintail-gripping jaws. 6. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 1 in which the hydraulic means of the power component comprises:

- an hydraulic reservoir fitted with a sliding piston, the hand grip having a lower end that extends axially through the reservoir and through the axial center of the piston, one of the mentioned passages in the hand grip extending into communication with the reservoir below the piston, and

the other of said passages having a downward and a lateral opening;

an hydraulic build-up chamber in communication with said downward opening of said other passage;

a check valve in said passage biased to close flow from said other passage to the build-up chamber;

an hydraulic safety valve being connected on its inlet side to the mentioned lateral opening in the passage that leads to the piston connected to the jawclosing means,

said safety valve being connected on its outlet side to the hydraulic reservoir and therethrough to the other of said passages; and

a high-power hydraulic piston operative in the buildup chamber and controlled by the pneumatic means.

7. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 6 provided with an air intensifier that includes the mentioned hydraulic piston,

a pneumatic piston attached to and larger than the hydraulic piston,

a chamber in which the pneumatic piston is operably movable, and

pneumatic means controlled by the mentioned trigger to control flow of operating air to one side of said chamber while venting the opposite side,

5 thereby to operatively move the hydraulic piston. 8. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 7 in which the pneumatic means comprises:

an air-flow-controlling trigger-operated valve,

a timing valve connected to the trigger-operated valve to receive air therefrom and to vent therethrough according to the operated position of said air-flow-controlling valve, and I an air-pressure-reversing valve connected to said timing valve and, in turn, connected to the opposite side of the chamber for the pneumatic piston.

9. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 8 provided with an hydraulic drain valve connected between the mentioned lateral opening in one of the passages in the hand grip and the side of the hydraulic build-up chamber into which the other of said passages opens, and

a piston to control said drain valve, operated to closed position by air in a line from the air-flowcontrolling valve, and biased to open position when said line is vented through the latter valve.

10. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 9 provided with an hydraulic safety valve connected across the mentioned lateral opening in one passage and the mentioned side of the hydraulic chamber,

said safety valve being connected across the hydraulic drain valve.

11. An air-controlled hydraulic tool according to claim 8 in which the air-flowcontrolling triggeroperated valve comprises:

a cylinder with an air inlet port at one end and longitudinally spaced lateral ports, one of which is an 40 exhaust port,

a poppet operable in said cylinder and having an end adapted to be depressed to shift the poppet from a position closing off air flow from the inlet port to a position connecting said inlet port to the other of said lateral ports, and

a line extending from the latter port to conduct air to the hydraulic reservoir, timing valve, reversing valve, hydraulic drain valve, and the chamber of the air intensifier above the pneumatic piston therein when the poppet is depressed, and to vent the above devices when the poppet is raised by incoming air to a position effecting communication between the two longitudinally spaced ports in the cylinder. 55 

1. An air-controlled hydraulic tool for setting a lockbolt fastener comprising a lockbolt and a swageable collar adapted for permanent clamping onto the lockbolt, a pintail on an end of the lockbolt severably removable after swaging of the collar on the lockbolt, said tool comprising: a gun portion comprising means to grip a pintail on said lockbolt, means to swage a locking collar onto the lockbolt forwardly of the pintail, and two separate hydraulically movable piston means to successively operate the gripping and swaging means; a trigger-provided hand grip extending downwardly from the gun portion and a passage for hydraulic fluid leading to each above-mentioned piston; and a power component extending downwardly from the hand grip and comprising hydraulic means to supply hydraulic fluid under pressure through said passages to the mentioned pistons, and pneumatic means to operate the hydraulic means and controlled by the trigger on the hand grip.
 2. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 1 in which the means to grip the pintail comprises: spring jaws biased to an open, non-gripping position, a stem connecting one of said pistons with the gripping means, and the other piston having a sleeve partly coextensive with said stem and provided with an end portion that closes said spring jaws upon relative endwise movement of said pistons.
 3. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 2 in which the means to swage the locking collar comprises: a diametrally reduced endmost portion of the end of the sleeve, and an anvil slidingly carried by the forward end of the gun portion and having an inturned annular flange around said reduced endmost portion of the sleeve for swaging engagement with an annular enlargement of the collar to lock the collar to the lockbolt.
 4. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 3 in which: the two separate pistons operate in differently sized cylinders in the gun portion, the piston connected to the pintail-engaging jaws and its cylinder are smaller than the piston connected to the mentioned jaw-closing sleeve and the cylinder thereof, and the mentioned hydraulic passages are connected to the respective cylinders, the port to the larger cylinder conducting high-pressure fluid to the rearward side of the piston therein to project the jaw-closing end of the gripping means, and the port to the smaller cylinder conducting fluid at a lower pressure to the forward side of the smaller piston to propel the jaws, when closed over a pintail, rearwardly to sever same from the lock bolt.
 5. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 3 in which: the anvil comprises a tubular member on the forward end of which the mentioned annular flange is provided, and a hole is provided in the wall of said tubular member adjacent to said flange for freely passing a collar into the anvil between said flange and the forward end of the pintail-gripping jaws.
 6. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 1 in which the hydraulic means of the power component comprises: an hydraulic reservoir fitted with a sliding piston, the hand grip having a lower end that extends axially through the reservoir and through the axial center of the piston, one of the mentioned passages in the hand grip extending into communication with the reservoir below the piston, and the other of said passages having a downward and a lateral opening; an hydraulic build-up chamber in communication with said downward opening of said other passage; a check valve in said passage biased to close flow from said other passage to the build-up chamber; an hydraulic safety valve being connected on its inlet side to the mentioned lateral opening in the passage that leads to the piston connected to the jaw-closing means, said safety valve being connected on its outlet side to the hydraulic reservoir and therethrough to the other of said passages; and a high-power hydraulic piston operative in the build-up chamber and controlled by the pneumatic means.
 7. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 6 provided with an air intensifier that includes the mentioned hydraulic piston, a pneumatic piston attached to and larger than the hydraulic piston, a chamber in which the pneumatic piston is operably movable, and pneumatic means controlled by the mentioned trigger to control flow of operating air to one side of said chamber while venting the opposite side, thereby to operatively move the hydraulic piston.
 8. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 7 in which the pneumatic means comprises: an air-flow-controlling trigger-operated valve, a timing valve connected to the trigger-operated valve to receive air therefrom and to vent therethrough according to the operated position of said air-flow-controlling valve, and an air-pressure-reversing valve connected to said timing valve and, in turn, connected to the opposite side of the chamber for the pneumatic piston.
 9. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 8 provided with an hydraulic drain valve connected between the mentioned lateral opening in one of the passages in the hand grip and the side of the hydraulic build-up chamber into which the other of said passages opens, and a piston to control said drain valve, operated to closed position by air in a line from the air-flow-controlling valve, and biased to open position when said line is vented through the latter valve.
 10. An air-controlled hydraulic tool as defined in claim 9 provided with an hydraulic safety valve connected across the mentioned lateral opening in one passage and the mentioned side of the hydraulic chamber, said safety valve being connected across the hydraulic drain valve.
 11. An air-controlled hydraulic tool according to claim 8 in which the air-flow-controlling trigger-operated valve comprises: a cylinder with an air inlet port at one end and longitudinally spaced lateral ports, one of whicH is an exhaust port, a poppet operable in said cylinder and having an end adapted to be depressed to shift the poppet from a position closing off air flow from the inlet port to a position connecting said inlet port to the other of said lateral ports, and a line extending from the latter port to conduct air to the hydraulic reservoir, timing valve, reversing valve, hydraulic drain valve, and the chamber of the air intensifier above the pneumatic piston therein when the poppet is depressed, and to vent the above devices when the poppet is raised by incoming air to a position effecting communication between the two longitudinally spaced ports in the cylinder. 